Apple announced that iphone sales are down. Actually, I have been thinking of getting off the iphone and android ecosystems. Are there other good alternatives? My primary needs are: email, google maps, text, slack, and lyft.
I'm not going to mention the application software or OS, since I'm sure someone more knowledgeable than me will give you information about that.
What you're probably not thinking about is the baseband processor, which negotiates cellular connections and handles everything related to making the phone an actual phone. The trouble with baseband modems/processors is that none of them are open source and that they oftentimes have direct memory access to the application processor. iPhones and the Purism Librem phone isolate the baseband further from the application processor than the average Android phone.
Even if you find a nice phone and install an open-source, audited, secure operating system, your hardware might compromise you.
And even if you find open-source, audited, secure hardware, your carrier might compromise you. The more I think about it, the more "secure smartphone" sounds like an oxymoron.
As always - it depends on your threat model. But frankly, for most cases - iPhone.
Might not be the answer you want, and it has neither the purity nor auditability of OSS. But sales are down because of pricing model insanity, which is fairly orthogonal to your question, and it's still huge (so you blend in) and from a corporation with incentives generally more aligned towards your security and privacy than most.
So, unless you're doing insane burners and low level hacking to make a more secure device, iPhone is probably the way to go.
I agree with you. Strictly comparing IOS to android, I would say IOS is more secure. Apple is in a position where they are incentivized to give you a secure and private product. They make money off of hardware sales, not ads (They are trying to increase their revenue from services though). They are incentivized to do as much processing on your phone as they can, because it saves server costs. Examples of this would be the facial matching in the camera app (IOS done on phone, android done at Google) and TTS of voicemail (only sent to Apple if you tell it to).
There are still dangers though. Apple still has control of your phone through things like updates and the ability to place in a backdoor if they are legally forced to. As far as I know, they have a good reputation though (see San Bernardino iPhone case).
What you're probably not thinking about is the baseband processor, which negotiates cellular connections and handles everything related to making the phone an actual phone. The trouble with baseband modems/processors is that none of them are open source and that they oftentimes have direct memory access to the application processor. iPhones and the Purism Librem phone isolate the baseband further from the application processor than the average Android phone.
Even if you find a nice phone and install an open-source, audited, secure operating system, your hardware might compromise you.